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Transportation Businesses Hardware Technology

Uber's Self-Driving Trucks Division Is Dead (techcrunch.com) 61

Uber is shuttering its self-driving unit, reports TechCrunch. The company will reportedly stop development of self-driving trucks and instead focus its efforts on self-driving cars. "We recently took the important step of returning to public roads in Pittsburgh, and as we look to continue that momentum, we believe having our entire team's energy and expertise focused on this effort is the best path forward," Eric Meyhofer, head of Uber Advanced Technologies Group, said in an emailed statement. From the report: Uber Freight, a business unit that helps truck drivers connect with shipping companies, is unaffected by this decision. "Rather than having two groups working side by side, focused on different vehicle platforms, I want us instead collaborating as one team, according to an email reviewed by TechCrunch that was sent by Meyhofer to employees. "I know we're all super proud of what the Trucks team has accomplished, and we continue to see the incredible promise of self-driving technology applied to moving freight across the country. But we believe delivering on self-driving for passenger applications first, and then bringing it to freight applications down the line, is the best path forward. For now, we need the focus of one team, with one clear objective." The company will pivot employees focused on self-driving trucks to other work that revolves around self-driving technology.
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Uber's Self-Driving Trucks Division Is Dead

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  • I have no citations to present but I think they are going about it backwards. Concentrate on the long haul trucks and the shipping industry, then leverage that know how and experience into self driving cars. The behaviors and needs of big trucks seems more predictable, the trucking industry seem more receptive and more likely to finance and adopt the technology. Then after having success there they can spread to other areas.

    • Sure automating the long haul part is about the easiest of the tasks. Especially if you have the software build virtual truck trains, with an awake driver in the lead vehicle.

      But their are laws in place and economic interests to protect. It will take 20 years to make it legal for a trucker to rest while his truck is rolling as part of a train. Until they do, it's a waste of effort.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      the trucking industry seem more receptive

      Teamsters.

      The soccer mom's union doesn't have nearly as much clout.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Pfft, it was all a pump and dump. Create the illusion of economic sector dominance, do the IPO, sell and run before it all explodes.

        Vehicle manufacturers who dominate the vehicle leasing market, will similarly dominate the automated vehicle market, for much the same reason.

    • Yeah... but if they did that, they would have less time to stall. By focusing on something a decade out, think of how many more quarters they can obfuscate their true performance...

  • One would think automated delivery truck would be much easier; they go between some loading dock and some other loading dock, not random street corners. And deliveries are made in the early hours of the morning when there's much less traffic.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      Anyone who really knows anything wouldn't think that autonomous driving is possible at all with todays (or any reasonably near future) technology. Autonomous driving falls into the "80% is easy" part. The last 20% is the tough part, and might never be solved. People are way too optimistic about automated driving and technology in general.
      • I'm sure a lot of people would be just fine if merely 80% of their driving needs were automatable, or their truck drove itself 80% of the way while they napped.

        Very few humans can do 100% of all driving tasks too (our accident rate is proof of that). Self-driving cars may never be perfect, but they're already good enough today for Waymo's taxis to be carrying unaccompanied passengers in Phoenix as we speak [fortune.com].

  • They're saving money (Score:5, Informative)

    by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Monday July 30, 2018 @06:53PM (#57036806)

    They know they'll never develop viable self-driving technology.
    They need to keep pretending they can, as it's the end-goal to turn a profit on their main business, ride-sharing.
    They'll lose investors if they give up on that. The company is still running at a loss, without constant investment it's going to collapse.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      That is the same trick that Tesla has been using. Eventually investors figure it out, the stock falls, then the lawsuits start.
      • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

        That is the same trick that Tesla has been using. Eventually investors figure it out, the stock falls, then the lawsuits start.

        Apples and Oranges. You can go out and buy a Tesla car today. You can't go out and buy an Uber self driving anything today.

    • Maybe. But Uber has no choice but to be in this game. If someone else arrives with reliable automated passenger car technology and Uber is far behind, Uber stock price can go to zero overnight.

      The vision of the future is that you can order your ride with a convenient app, which could be Uber or Lyft or Google or Apple or Walmart -- nobody cares who is the provider when the service is a cheap commodity.

      Even if that vision is a looooong way off, Uber cannot look like it will allow itself to be written out o

  • ...it has simply hit a wall. *rimshot*

    I'll see myself out. ;)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Translation: "the path to making this stuff work is a lot harder than we thought. So the path to profits is a waaaaays out. So, we're going to "combine" these units, and expect us to dribble out layoffs as we 'realize synergies' "

  • The link in that article goes to goldseek.com, which has dick all to do with Uber trucks.

    What is going on here? Are that many people really ranting without clicking on the link, or has it been subsequently hacked?

    • There is no reason to read any article on this topic. The headline says it all. This is totally expected as the interest in self-driving cars will eventually fade out. Just like it did in the 1970s and 80s. And the editors aren't paying attention at this point to whatever they post.
    • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

      The link in that article goes to goldseek.com, which has dick all to do with Uber trucks.

      What is going on here? Are that many people really ranting without clicking on the link, or has it been subsequently hacked?

      The actual link *is* in the tech crunch name on the heading.

      But shame on the editors for the pimping. Not that they actually care what we think.

  • by Huge_UID ( 1089143 ) on Tuesday July 31, 2018 @12:09PM (#57041806)
    That means fewer people will be.

    And before you rant about how autonomous cars and trucks will save lives because human drivers suck, I agree. I just want competent companies building them, not Uber.

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